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About The Name

People ask me all the time about the name of my blog, Little Hollywood. Little Hollywood was the name of the shantytown down along the shores of what is now Capitol Lake, a place where some lively characters of Olympia lived. It was our "Hooverville" from the 1920s through the early 1950s. Well, as we know, our area has a lot of interesting, talented, educated characters, and the point of this blog is to help shine the light on some of our "stars" that might not ordinarily be heard through corporate media outlets. So, the name has a double meaning. And since it's my blog, it's Janine's Little Hollywood. Enjoy!

About Me

Thank you for visiting my blog! As a photographer, I also have a website, http://www.littlehollywoodphotography.com. I love Olympia and meet a lot of people who tell me great stories. I love to learn, and hope this blog of local news will be just another source of information for you. Please don't be shy to leave comments. I have set it up so the comments are private first, until I publish them, so if you don't want your comment published, just tell me so. And oh yeah, I'd appreciate it if corporate media or other news outlets did not steal my stories. Please ask if you'd like to reprint my story in your publication or at least give credit where credit is due if you read it here first. Associated Press standards consider blogs a legitimate news source and should be treated as such. Thank you!

Port of Olympia commissioners George Barner and Bill
McGregor interviewed the four remaining applicants today for position #3. The selected person will hold the position until the November election is certified.

Larry Goodman, Fred Finn, Jerry Farmer and George
Sharp each answered the same six questions posed yesterday to E.J. Zita, Dick
Pust, Bob Jones and Michelle Morris. Each were then handed an envelope
containing a mystery question posed by Commissioner McGregor and given
instructions to answer the question in another room. Their reactions varied depending on whether or not they arrived
early, or attended yesterday’s interview session.

Quick-witted Jerry Farmer, who arrived just before
his interview and did not attend yesterday’s session, quipped, “It’s not a take
home test?”

The commissioners hope to arrive at a decision in
public at their port meeting scheduled for Wednesday, June 10, 5:30 p.m. at
Tumwater Town Center, 7241 Cleanwater Drive SW.
If they can’t arrive at a decision, the decision will be bumped to the
Thurston County commissioners, who will have until September 28 to make their
decision.

“After that, if they can’t make a decision, it goes
to the Governor, then by that time we’ll have an election and it’ll all be
over,” joked Commissioner McGregor.

Mystery
Question Revealed

Speculation abounded as to the question in the mystery envelope. Outside after the meeting, Commissioner McGregor
revealed the question to Rolf Boone of The Olympian and Little
Hollywood.

The question was: “In your opinion, what is the
future of Capitol Lake?”

In the sometimes free-wheeling verbal interview process, Commissioner Barner led some applicants into a conversation about
that subjectwhile others offered their opinion on the issue
without being asked. Some perceived the question to be a trap, and refused to
fall into it, since the question of Capitol Lake’s future is not up to the Port
Commission to decide. Barner said yesterday that he didn’t know the question
posed by Commissioner McGregor.

The process for revealing applicant’s answers to the question was further clarified today. The handwritten answers will be scanned and placed on the Port’s website, www.portolympia.com, sometime on Wednesday, said port public information officer Kathleen White. When asked, penmanship, spelling, and grammar will apparently not be graded.

Today’s
Interviews

Most of the eight candidates are well known to the
commissioners, and some have served on boards with the commissioners due to the
overlapping nature of our civic minded and active South Sound community.

Like yesterday, all the applicants interviewed today
possessed strong and varied skill sets, and each offered articulate, compelling
stories of their deep rooted personal and professional involvement in the South Sound.

Larry Goodman has lived in Olympia since 1967. From that year through 1996, he served as the
director of field services, state board activities and negotiations for the
Washington Federation of State Employees. This role, as well as his other
director-level positions and his 30 plus years of community service makes him a
strong candidate, he says. Goodman said that he values participation in the
community, being a representative of the working people and would exercise
great fiscal responsibility as a commissioner.

Saying he was impressed with the port's materials, Goodman said, “The port has an enormous responsibility for the
welfare of this community in so many areas – that’s what makes it a challenge
and piques my interest...I'd listen a lot, and prepare myself for a full term....”

Fred Finn has lived within the district for 27 years
and has an extensive background in public service, including elective office,
law, real estate development, contract and union negotiations, business and
environmental experience. Finn, a state
representative from the 35th Legislative District from 2008 – 2012,
said that the committees upon which he served all routinely examined issues
directly impacting ports and their responsibilities. He is currently
commissioner of the Washington State Lottery and a board member of the
Washington State Ethics Board.

In his final remarks, Finn said that he is looking
forward to the port’s economic benefit study, which is designed to calculate how much the
community benefits directly and indirectly from port activities. He expressed concern about the
methodology of the study, as did other applicants, and said he looked forward to that process.

Jerry Farmer is co-owner of 94.5 Roxy Radio. He
arrived in Olympia in 1972 from California to help Dave Wilson start Dirty Dave’s
Pizza Parlor. He said his experience as a popular announcer and master of ceremonies
for charity auctions and events, from chambers of commerce to community
non-profits, helps him be well versed in our community's connections. Farmer
has long been involved with Thurston Community Television, and hosted a comedy
show called “Funny Guy on the Prowl.” He is currently a business representative
on the Thurston Regional Planning Council’s Transportation Policy Board.

Asked by Barner,“Why do you want to
serve on the Port of Olympia commission?” Farmer responded:

“….To me, the port position seems like a great way
to help the community and by that, I mean to help guide it to invest in the
infrastructure that can create jobs - good paying jobs so families can spend
money at local businesses like the farmer’s market, contribute to local
charities, get the most out of our great recreational facilities and quite
frankly, have the money to pay taxes to support and preserve our fantastic parks…ultimately
making our quality of life that much better….Literally, the port is a way to
help all those boats rise together.”

Farmer remembered the condition the port's marina area property used to be when he moved here and compared it to the way it is now.

“Frankly, I'm amazed. It used to be a cesspool...it was absolutely the most woe-be-gone section of town...legacy pollution, dilapidated buildings...it wasn't a very nice place, and since that time, it's become the gem of the South Sound...and sometimes those things get lost in the controversy over the port....”

George Sharp served most recently as executive
director of the Olympia-Lacey-Tumwater Visitor and Convention Bureau (VCB),
forging strong relationships with regional city, county, and port staff and
elected officials. He recently left that
position to pursue his own community and economic development consulting business.
Prior to his four year VCB stint, he worked for the Washington State Department
of Community, Trade and Economic Development in a variety of marketing, public
relations, and tourism development positions.

Sharp offered several specific ideas for the Port to
better communicate the port’s story to the community, including the creation of
a television/web based series about port staff and their professional roles and
responsibilities.

Sharp expressed support for several of the port’s
current programs and said he’d like to be part of the commission to help explore
several questions: “What do we do really well and what could we do better?
What should we stop doing? What should we start doing because of new
technologies? Who else should we be partnering with? What resources do we need
to be successful? What are the fiscal impacts of the decisions we are making?”

He urged the commissioners to tap community
expertise for best practices. “We don’t have to be the brainchild but know the
world class leaders in our own community.”

Two-Step
Process

The applicants who are not running for election to
the position will serve roughly five months, until the November
election is certified. Four applicants, E.J. Zita, Jerry Farmer, Bob Jones, and
Larry Goodman are running for election to the position, the other four are not.

The applicants who are not running for election to
the position explained why they wanted to be considered for the position.

Michelle Morris wrote in her application, “My goal is to provide a smooth
transition from the vacancy left by Dr. Gunn’s resignation to the next office
holder chosen by the voters. I will provide stability, exercise fiscal
responsibility and make every effort to restore the public’s trust and
demonstrate that public participation in their port is valued.”

Fred Finn wrote in his application: “It is my intent
to remove the perceived advantage incumbency may have in the election. My not
seeking election should not be considered any less a commitment to the Port and
its vital functions.”

Dick Pust wrote in his application: “By not running
for office, I can devote full attention to being a good Port commissioner and
not be distracted by a campaign. Voters, meanwhile, will have plenty of time to
get to know the candidates and make their selections during the primary and
general elections. And, all candidates will have the opportunity to run as
equals without having to run against an incumbent, who all too often, has an
advantage.”

Commissioners are paid a $500 a month stipend and
paid $114 a meeting up to 96 meetings a year, not to exceed $16,944.
Commissioners and their dependents also receive health care benefits.